Fluorescently labeled cell showing the cell body in green, the cytoskeleton in blue, the cell nucleus in yellow, and actin focal-adhesion rings wrapped around surface-fixed particles. New study shows ...
New study shows that aggressive cancer cells can be identified in a simple, new way; by how they physically behave, not just by their genes. Using specially textured Meta surfaces pattered with tiny ...
Cancer is no longer seen as a single genetic error but as a complex, multi-layered disease shaped by DNA mutations, epigenetic changes and even patterns in medical images. New research at ...
Most of the cells in our bodies don't move—they stay where they're supposed to in service to our organs and biological systems. But aggressive cancer cells behave differently, spreading and ultimately ...
Study shows aggressive cancer cells reveal themselves by physical behavior on textured metasurfaces, not genes, enabling fast, label-free detection missed by flat tests. (Nanowerk News) New study ...
Scientists have discovered why ovarian cancer spreads so rapidly through the abdomen. Cancer cells enlist normally protective abdominal cells, forming mixed groups that work together to invade new ...
A new study led by Aaron Hobbs, Ph.D., and Rachel Burge, Ph.D., at MUSC Hollings Cancer Center, sheds light on why pancreatic tumors with the KRAS G12R mutation behave differently from other ...
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, marked by the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells. What makes it ...
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Mesothelial cells enable rapid invasion and spread of ovarian cancer
Ovarian cancer kills more women than any other gynecological cancer. Most patients receive their diagnosis only after the ...
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